WO2017131812A1 - On-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system - Google Patents

On-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2017131812A1
WO2017131812A1 PCT/US2016/040291 US2016040291W WO2017131812A1 WO 2017131812 A1 WO2017131812 A1 WO 2017131812A1 US 2016040291 W US2016040291 W US 2016040291W WO 2017131812 A1 WO2017131812 A1 WO 2017131812A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
oxy
hydrogen generator
demand
hydrogen
water
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2016/040291
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Serge V. Monros
Original Assignee
Monros Serge V
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Monros Serge V filed Critical Monros Serge V
Publication of WO2017131812A1 publication Critical patent/WO2017131812A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02MSUPPLYING COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL WITH COMBUSTIBLE MIXTURES OR CONSTITUENTS THEREOF
    • F02M21/00Apparatus for supplying engines with non-liquid fuels, e.g. gaseous fuels stored in liquid form
    • F02M21/02Apparatus for supplying engines with non-liquid fuels, e.g. gaseous fuels stored in liquid form for gaseous fuels
    • F02M21/0218Details on the gaseous fuel supply system, e.g. tanks, valves, pipes, pumps, rails, injectors or mixers
    • F02M21/0287Details on the gaseous fuel supply system, e.g. tanks, valves, pipes, pumps, rails, injectors or mixers characterised by the transition from liquid to gaseous phase ; Injection in liquid phase; Cooling and low temperature storage
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C25ELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25BELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES FOR THE PRODUCTION OF COMPOUNDS OR NON-METALS; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25B1/00Electrolytic production of inorganic compounds or non-metals
    • C25B1/01Products
    • C25B1/02Hydrogen or oxygen
    • C25B1/04Hydrogen or oxygen by electrolysis of water
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C25ELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25BELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES FOR THE PRODUCTION OF COMPOUNDS OR NON-METALS; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25B11/00Electrodes; Manufacture thereof not otherwise provided for
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C25ELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25BELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES FOR THE PRODUCTION OF COMPOUNDS OR NON-METALS; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25B11/00Electrodes; Manufacture thereof not otherwise provided for
    • C25B11/02Electrodes; Manufacture thereof not otherwise provided for characterised by shape or form
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C25ELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25BELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES FOR THE PRODUCTION OF COMPOUNDS OR NON-METALS; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25B9/00Cells or assemblies of cells; Constructional parts of cells; Assemblies of constructional parts, e.g. electrode-diaphragm assemblies; Process-related cell features
    • C25B9/17Cells comprising dimensionally-stable non-movable electrodes; Assemblies of constructional parts thereof
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02MSUPPLYING COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL WITH COMBUSTIBLE MIXTURES OR CONSTITUENTS THEREOF
    • F02M21/00Apparatus for supplying engines with non-liquid fuels, e.g. gaseous fuels stored in liquid form
    • F02M21/02Apparatus for supplying engines with non-liquid fuels, e.g. gaseous fuels stored in liquid form for gaseous fuels
    • F02M21/0203Apparatus for supplying engines with non-liquid fuels, e.g. gaseous fuels stored in liquid form for gaseous fuels characterised by the type of gaseous fuel
    • F02M21/0206Non-hydrocarbon fuels, e.g. hydrogen, ammonia or carbon monoxide
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02MSUPPLYING COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL WITH COMBUSTIBLE MIXTURES OR CONSTITUENTS THEREOF
    • F02M25/00Engine-pertinent apparatus for adding non-fuel substances or small quantities of secondary fuel to combustion-air, main fuel or fuel-air mixture
    • F02M25/06Engine-pertinent apparatus for adding non-fuel substances or small quantities of secondary fuel to combustion-air, main fuel or fuel-air mixture adding lubricant vapours
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02EREDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
    • Y02E60/00Enabling technologies; Technologies with a potential or indirect contribution to GHG emissions mitigation
    • Y02E60/30Hydrogen technology
    • Y02E60/36Hydrogen production from non-carbon containing sources, e.g. by water electrolysis
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02TCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
    • Y02T10/00Road transport of goods or passengers
    • Y02T10/10Internal combustion engine [ICE] based vehicles
    • Y02T10/12Improving ICE efficiencies
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02TCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
    • Y02T10/00Road transport of goods or passengers
    • Y02T10/10Internal combustion engine [ICE] based vehicles
    • Y02T10/30Use of alternative fuels, e.g. biofuels

Definitions

  • the present invention generally relates to internal combustion engines. More particularly, the present invention relates to an on-demand oxy- hydrogen fuel system which is incorporated into the fuel supply system of a standard internal combustion engine.
  • the piston is pushed downward against the crankshaft by the pressure exerted by the expansion of detonated fuel and air. Exhaust fumes are allowed to exit the cylinder when the rotation of the crankshaft and camshaft opens the exhaust valve.
  • the movement of the piston on the subsequent oscillation creates a vacuum in the cylinder which draws additional fresh oil/fuel/air into the cylinder, thereby simultaneously pushing the
  • crankcase Condensed contaminants form corrosive acids and sludge in the interior of the components. This decreases the ability of the engine oil in the crankcase to lubricate the cylinder and crankshaft. Degraded oil that fails to properly lubricate the crankshaft components (e.g. the crankshaft and
  • connecting rods can contribute to accelerated wear and tear in the engine, resulting in degraded engine performance.
  • Inadequate crankcase lubrication contributes to degradation of the piston rings, which reduces the effectiveness of the seal between the combustion chamber and the crankcase.
  • crankcase ventilation systems evacuate blow-by gases from the crankcase via a device referred to as a Positive
  • PCV Crankcase Ventilation
  • PCV valve re-circulates (i.e. vents) blow-by gases from the crankcase back into the intake manifold to be burned again with a fresh supply of air/fuel during subsequent combustion cycles. This is particularly desirable as the harmful blow-by gases are not simply vented to the atmosphere.
  • On-Board Diagnostics refers to early vehicle self-diagnostic systems and reporting capabilities developed and installed in automobiles by manufacturers. OBD systems provide current state information for various vehicle subsystems. The quantity of diagnostic information available via OBD has varied widely since the introduction of on-board computers to automobiles in the early 1 980s. OBD originally illuminated a malfunction indicator light (MIL) for a detected problem, but did not provide information regarding the nature of the problem. Modern OBD implementations use a standardized highspeed digital communications port to provide real-time data in combination with standardized series of diagnostic trouble codes (DTCs) to facilitate rapid identification of malfunctions and the corresponding remedies from within the vehicle.
  • DTCs diagnostic trouble codes
  • CARB California Air Resources Board
  • OBD-I OBD-I
  • the aim of CARB was to encourage automobile manufacturers to design reliable emission control systems.
  • CARB envisioned lowering vehicle emissions in California by denying registration to vehicles that did not pass the CARB vehicle emission standards.
  • OBD-I did not succeed at the time because the infrastructure for testing and reporting emissions-specific diagnostic information was not standardized or widely accepted.
  • Technical difficulties in obtaining standardized and reliable emission information from all vehicles resulted in a systemic inability to effectively implement an annual emissions testing program.
  • OBD-II was a new standard introduced in the mid- 1 990s that
  • OBD-II incorporates enhanced features that provide better engine monitoring technologies. OBD-II also monitors chassis parts, body and accessory devices, and includes an automobile diagnostic control network.
  • OBD-II improved upon OBD-I in both capability and standardization.
  • OBD-II specifies the type of diagnostic connector, pin configuration, electrical signaling protocols, messaging format and provides an extensible list of diagnostic trouble codes (DTCs).
  • DTCs diagnostic trouble codes
  • OBD-II also monitors a specific list of vehicle parameters and encodes performance data for each of those parameters. Thus, a single device can query the on-board computer(s) in any vehicle. This simplification of reporting diagnostic data led to the feasibility of the comprehensive emissions testing program envisioned by CARB.
  • spark ignition energy reduction (which will increase ignition system life) was carried out at an oxygen level of 9 %, leading to a NOx emission level of 28 ppm (0.1 3 g/bhp-hr NO).
  • the spark ignition energy reduction testing found that spark energy could be reduced 22% (from 1 51 mj supplied to the coil) with 1 3% (LHV H2/LHV CH4) oxy-hydrogen supplementation, and even further reduced 27% with 1 7% oxy-hydrogen supplementation, with no reportable effect on NOx emissions for these conditions and with stable engine torque output.
  • the on- demand oxy-hydrogen generator comprised a fluid reservoir containing an electrolyte solution.
  • the present invention is directed to an on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator for use in internal combustion engines.
  • the on-demand oxy- hydrogen generator comprises, generally, (a) a fluid reservoir containing electrically conductive de-gassed water; (b) a cap for sealing an opening on the fluid reservoir, wherein the cap has a positive terminal, a negative terminal and a gas outlet in communication with an interior of the fluid reservoir; and (c) a pair of the electrode plates attached to the cap and extending into the interior of the fluid reservoir so as to be at least partially submerged in the de-gassed water, one of the pair of electrode plates electrically coupled to the positive terminal and another of the pair of electrode plates electrically coupled to the negative terminal.
  • Positively charged nano-particles of silver and/or platinum may be suspended within the de-gassed water.
  • the positively charged nano-particles comprise a catalyst in an electrolysis reaction of the de-gassed water.
  • the electrode plates may comprise non-metallic conductive coatings such as a field of carbon nano-tubes.
  • the electrode plates may comprise a series of metal plates made from a metal selected from the group consisting of zinc, cadmium, gold, platinum and palladium, or from beryllium-copper, beryllium-titanium, and sodium-tungsten alloys.
  • the metal plates also comprise a catalyst in an electrolysis reaction of water.
  • a secondary reservoir which contains additional degassed water.
  • the secondary reservoir is fluidly connected to the fluid reservoir.
  • a sensor is also provided which for detecting the level of the degassed water in the fluid reservoir.
  • a gas outlet on the oxy-hydrogen generator releases oxy- hydrogen produced by electrolysis of the de-gassed water.
  • the gas outlet is fluidly coupled to an intake manifold on the engine.
  • a microcontroller is operably connected to the oxy-hydrogen generator for selectively activating the oxy-hydrogen generator in response to a demand for oxy-hydrogen (HOH).
  • the gas outlet is fluidly coupled to a pollution control system for recycling blow-by gases from a crankcase on the internal combustion engine to the intake manifold.
  • the pollution control system comprises a PCV (Positive Crankcase Ventilation) valve in-line with a vent line from the crankcase and a blow-by return line to the intake manifold.
  • the gas outlet is coupled to the vent line from the crankcase, the blow-by return line to the intake manifold, or the PCV valve.
  • the microcontroller is operably connected to the PCV valve for regulating a flow rate of blow-by gases through the PCV valve.
  • FIGURE 1 is a schematic diagram of an automobile, illustrating various sensors as well as a microcontroller and a PCV valve and an on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator operably coupled to the PCV valve and microcontroller, in accordance with the present invention
  • FIGURE 2 is a diagrammatic cross-sectional view of an internal combustion engine illustrating the incorporation of the oxy-hydrogen
  • FIGURE 3 is a perspective view of a cap and electrode plates of the oxy-hydrogen generator of the present invention.
  • FIGURE 4 is a perspective view of an oxy-hydrogen generator embodying the present invention generating oxy-hydrogen, and coupled to an optional bubbler reservoir.
  • the present invention is directed to an on-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system which is incorporated into a standard internal combustion engine.
  • the oxy-hydrogen generator embodying the present invention is referred to generally by the reference number 1 00.
  • the oxy- hydrogen generator 1 00 of the present invention is incorporated into a pollution control system, such as that illustrated and described in US8, 360,038 and US201 4/0207360 Al , the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
  • the oxy-hydrogen generated by the system of the present invention is added to blow-by gases regulated by a microcontroller 1 0 and a PCV valve 1 2.
  • the microcontroller 1 0 is preferably mounted under a hood 1 4 of an automobile 1 6.
  • the microcontroller 1 0 is electrically coupled to one or more of a plurality of sensors that monitor and measure real-time operating conditions and performance of the automobile 1 6.
  • microcontroller 1 0 regulates the flow rate of blow-by gases by regulating the engine vacuum in a combustion engine through digital control of a PCV valve 1 2.
  • the microcontroller 1 0 receives real-time input from sensors that might include an engine temperature sensor 1 8, a spark plug sensor 20, a battery sensor 22, a PCV valve sensor 24, and engine RPM sensor 26, an accelerometer sensor 28, and an exhaust sensor 30. Data obtained from the sensors 1 8, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, and 30 by the microcontroller 1 0 is used to regulate the PCV valve 1 2 , as described in more detail below.
  • the microcontroller 1 0 preferably comprises a digitally controlled back-flash diode and a digitally controlled pressure regulator valve rather than just an on-off regulator designed to meet HOH demand.
  • FIGURE 2 is a schematic illustrating operation of the microcontroller 1 0 in conjunction with the PCV valve 1 2 in a car engine 1 5.
  • the PCV valve 1 2 is disposed between a crankcase 49, of an engine 1 5, and an intake manifold 51 .
  • the intake manifold 51 receives a mixture of fuel and air via a fuel line 41 and an air line 42 , respectively.
  • An air filter 44 may be disposed between the air line 42 and an air intake line 46 to filter fresh air before mixing with fuel in the intake manifold 51 .
  • the air/fuel mixture in the intake manifold 51 is delivered to a piston cylinder 48 as a piston 50 descends downward within the cylinder 48 from the top dead center.
  • the PCV valve 1 2 is designed to vent these blow-by gases from the crankcase 49 to the intake manifold 51 to be recycled as fuel for the engine 1 5. This is accomplished by using the pressure differential between the crankcase 49 and the intake manifold 51 .
  • the blow-by gases exit the relatively higher pressure crankcase 49 through a vent 72 and travel through a vent line 74, the PCV valve 1 2, a blow-by return line 76 and into a relatively lower pressure intake manifold 51 coupled thereto.
  • the quantity of blow-by gases vented from the crankcase 49 to the intake manifold 51 via the PCV valve 1 2 is digitally regulated by the microcontroller 1 0, which is connected to the PCV valve via connection wires 32.
  • the microcontroller 1 0 is powered by a battery 1 1 and grounded at the ground connection 1 3.
  • the microcontroller 1 0 functions in three states. First, upon ignition of the vehicle, the microcontroller 1 0 causes the solenoid 80 in the PCV valve 1 2 to stay closed, as described above. This is because the engine 1 5 of the vehicle produces large quantities of pollution while still heating up. Once the engine 1 5 is properly heated, it functions more efficiently and produces less pollution. At that point, the microcontroller 1 0 enters the next state and functions as a window switch based on the engine RPM. While the engine is operating with a certain RPM range, the microcontroller 1 0 causes the solenoid 80 in the PCV valve 1 2 to open. Once the engine falls out of that RPM range, the solenoid 80 in the PCV valve 1 2 closes again.
  • the microcontroller 1 0 activates a timing sequence so the vehicle's on-board diagnostics is prevented from introducing too much fuel into the engine.
  • This timing sequence can be programmed to any interval, but in the preferred embodiment the sequence causes the solenoid 80 in the PCV valve 1 2 to be open for two minutes, then closed for 1 0 minutes. This sequence is repeated indefinitely until the engine RPM falls out of the given range.
  • the logic of the microcontroller 1 0 is based primarily on engine RPM, the microcontroller 1 0 may have logic based on other criteria. Such criteria may be engine temperature and engine torque, as well as crankcase pressure. Basing the microcontroller logic on these additional criteria makes for a control system that is more adjustable and programmable.
  • the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 of the present invention is operably coupled to the microcontroller 1 0 and the PCV valve 1 2.
  • the microcontroller 1 0 is used to selectively power the oxy- hydrogen generator 1 00, causing the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 to generate oxy-hydrogen and create a flow of oxy-hydrogen into the PCV valve and/or the intake manifold 51 with the blow-by gases from the crankcase.
  • the produced oxy-hydrogen is approximately 1 80 octane, and thus provides a very efficient fuel source that can dramatically increase fuel efficiency and reduce emissions.
  • the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 comprises a series of electrode plates 1 04 and 1 06, comprising anode and cathode electrodes.
  • the plates 1 04 and 1 06 can comprise any known conductors which can be used for electrolysis of a water solution into oxy- hydrogen gas.
  • the plates 1 04 and 1 06 may serve as a catalyst or promoter to facilitate the rate of the chemical reaction of the water being turned into oxy- hydrogen gas and oxygen.
  • the plates merely serve to conduct electricity through the water solution to perform the electrolysis and electrically convert the water molecules to oxy-hydrogen and oxygen gas.
  • the plates 1 04 and 1 06 may be metallic plates comprising zinc, gold, platinum, cadmium, palladium and the like. Such plates, however, typically cannot be used long term without substantial degradation, especially in anode applications.
  • Alternative alloyed elements such as beryllium-copper, beryllium-titanium, and/or sodium-tungsten are significantly superior in terms of (a) conductivity, (b) surface degradation, (c) residual persistence, and (d) longevity.
  • the anode/cathode metals are carefully matched to optimize electron exchange (e.g., sodium-tungsten anodes with beryllium- copper cathodes), the dissociation efficiency of an electrolytic cell can be substantially increased.
  • microscopy illustrates the liberation of H+ and OH- ions occurring at those points. •
  • the fundamental limitation of this approach is that no amount of surface treatment can be expected to significantly increase the effective surface area exhibited by a flat plate.
  • two approaches have been demonstrated that mitigate this limitation:
  • Carbon nano-tubes can be grown in situ on the surface of electrically conductive substrates with extraordinary precision and at rapidly declining costs. Carbon nano-tube technologies serve to (a) exponentially increase surface area, and (b) exponentially increase ionization/ dissociation efficiencies in electrolytical processes.
  • the present invention contemplates the use of the electrically-conductive materials for anode and/or cathode conductors that are not metallic.
  • conductive substrates coated with a field of carbon nano-tubes grown in place with a specified number of "turns" or “twists” will provide much higher conductivity and exponentially-increased surface area when compared with flat metallic plates.
  • the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 includes a cap 1 08 which seals the top of a container 1 1 0. Electrodes or terminals 1 1 2 and 1 1 4, representing the cathode and anode, extend from electrical coupling to the plates 1 04 and 1 06 to the exterior of the cap 1 08 so as to be coupled to electrical wires from the electrical source of the internal combustion engine, such as the battery, alternator or the like.
  • an electrolyte water solution is created, such as by adding an electrolytic salt - potassium nitrate, sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) or the like - to the water. This creates an effective electrolyte solution which requires much less electricity to cause the electrolysis of the water. As the plates 1 04 and 1 06 become electrically charged, they cause the electrolyte solution 1 1 6 to boil, creating oxy-hydrogen gas 1 1 8 in an upper portion of the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00.
  • This oxy-hydrogen gas 1 1 8 is channeled via outlet 1 20 to the intake manifold 51 , either by means of the PCV valve 1 2 and/or introducing the oxy-hydrogen gas directly into the intake manifold 51 or plumbing the system such that it is combined with the blow-by gases from the crankcase before they enter the intake manifold 51 .
  • the produced oxy- hydrogen is approximately 1 80 octane, and thus provides a very efficient fuel source for re-burning the blow-by gases so as to dramatically increase fuel efficiency and reduce emissions.
  • HOH can be produced at the rate of 22.4 liters per mole at an effective voltage of 0.1 22 VDC - fully 1 0 times more efficiently than the predicted rate. Further, the energy density of HOH gas (depending on
  • meteorological variables such humidity, temperature, dew point, etc.
  • HOH 1 ml 87 octane gasoline, which is also fully 1 0 times greater than the predicted value generated with the ideal gas formula.
  • Suspensions have been held in storage for more than 5 years without demonstrating any significant degree of precipitation.
  • the fact that the silver nano-particles held in suspension are positively charged enables them to act as electrical charge-discharge step-stones between water molecules without dissociating the water molecules in the same manner as ionic salts.
  • the system of the present invention may incorporate a reservoir bubbler 1 22 having additional electrolyte solution 1 1 6 therein so as to refill and recharge the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 as the electrolyte solution levels decrease over time as gases are produced.
  • the reservoir bubbler 1 22 does take up valuable space within the engine compartment.
  • the present invention includes a sensor 1 24 in the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 which will alert the user when the water electrolyte solution level gets low. It is anticipated with normal use, the electrolyte water solution will only need to be filled every few months.

Abstract

An on-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system for an internal combustion engine includes an oxy-hydrogen generator and a microcontroller which activates the oxy-hydrogen generator when oxy-hydrogen is needed. The oxy-hydrogen is then mixed with blow-by gases from a PCV valve which are recycled through the intake manifold. The addition of the oxy-hydrogen provides a very efficient fuel source which can dramatically increase fuel efficiency and reduce emissions.

Description

ON-DEMAND OXY-HYDROGEN FUEL SYSTEM
DESCRI PTION BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[Para 1 ] The present invention generally relates to internal combustion engines. More particularly, the present invention relates to an on-demand oxy- hydrogen fuel system which is incorporated into the fuel supply system of a standard internal combustion engine.
[Para 2] The basic operation of conventional piston-based internal combustion engines (ICE) varies based on the functional type of combustion process, the number of cylinders and the desired use. For instance, in a traditional two-cycle engine, oil is pre-mixed with fuel and air before the oil- fuel-air mixture is injected into the cylinder where the oil/fuel/air mixture is ignited. In a typical four-cycle gasoline engine, atomized fuel is pre-mixed with air, compressed by the movement of the piston against the cylinder head, and ignited by a spark plug that causes the fuel to burn. In a diesel engine, fuel and air are pre-mixed, atomized, and injected into the cylinder. However, in a diesel engine there is no spark plug to provide ignition. Instead, the fuel/air mixture is ignited by the combination of heat accumulated by the mass of the cylinder head and compression by the piston. In each type of internal
combustion engine, the piston is pushed downward against the crankshaft by the pressure exerted by the expansion of detonated fuel and air. Exhaust fumes are allowed to exit the cylinder when the rotation of the crankshaft and camshaft opens the exhaust valve. The movement of the piston on the subsequent oscillation creates a vacuum in the cylinder which draws additional fresh oil/fuel/air into the cylinder, thereby simultaneously pushing the
remaining exhaust out the exhaust port and driving by-pass gases out of the crankcase through the positive crankcase ventilation (PCV) valve. Momentum drives the piston back into the compression stroke as the process repeats itself.
[Para 3] In a diesel or gasoline powered engine, as opposed to a two-stroke engine, oil lubrication of the crankshaft and connecting rod bearings is supported by an oil distribution system that is separated from the fuel/air mixture. In a diesel or gasoline powered engine, the fuel/air mixture in the intake manifold is drawn into the combustion chamber where it is ignited by either spark plugs (in a gasoline engine) or compression. The combustion chamber in both gasoline and diesel engines is largely isolated from the crankcase by a set of piston rings that are disposed around an outer diameter of each piston within each piston cylinder. The seals are included in the design of the engine as a way of containing the pressure exerted by each ignition event and forcing the exhaust gases to exit via the exhaust port rather than allowing the hot, pressurized gases to escape into the crankcase.
[Para 4] Unfortunately, the piston rings are unable to completely isolate and contain the pressurized exhaust gases. Consequently, small amounts of crankcase oil intended to lubricate the cylinder are instead drawn into the combustion chamber and burned during the combustion process. This is true in both gasoline and diesel powered engines. Additionally, combustion waste gases comprising unburned fuel and exhaust gases in the combustion chamber simultaneously pass the piston rings and enter the crankcase. The waste gases entering the crankcase are commonly referred to as "blow-by" or "blow-by gas". Blow-by gases mainly consist of contaminants such as hydrocarbons (unburned fuel), carbon dioxide and/or water vapor, all of which serve to contaminate the oil held in the engine crankcase. The quantity of blow-by gases which leak into the crankcase can be several times that of the concentration of hydrocarbons in the intake manifold. Simply venting these gases to the atmosphere increases air pollution.
[Para 5] Alternatively, trapping the blow-by gases in the crankcase allows the contaminants to condense and accumulate over time in the engine
crankcase. Condensed contaminants form corrosive acids and sludge in the interior of the components. This decreases the ability of the engine oil in the crankcase to lubricate the cylinder and crankshaft. Degraded oil that fails to properly lubricate the crankshaft components (e.g. the crankshaft and
connecting rods) can contribute to accelerated wear and tear in the engine, resulting in degraded engine performance. Inadequate crankcase lubrication contributes to degradation of the piston rings, which reduces the effectiveness of the seal between the combustion chamber and the crankcase.
[Para 6] As the engine ages, the gaps between the piston rings and cylinder walls increase, resulting in larger quantities of blow-by gases entering the crankcase. Excessive blow-by gases in the crankcase results in power loss and eventual engine failure. Condensed water vapor carried by the blow-by gases can condense inside the engine, causing engine parts to rust. In 1 970, the United States Environmental Protection Agency mandated the introduction of crankcase ventilation systems to mitigate volume of blow-by gases allowed to build up in the crankcase. In general, crankcase ventilation systems evacuate blow-by gases from the crankcase via a device referred to as a Positive
Crankcase Ventilation (PCV) valve. In modern engines, blow-by gases are scavenged from the crankcase and re-routed back into the intake manifold to be re-burned.
[Para 7] The PCV valve re-circulates (i.e. vents) blow-by gases from the crankcase back into the intake manifold to be burned again with a fresh supply of air/fuel during subsequent combustion cycles. This is particularly desirable as the harmful blow-by gases are not simply vented to the atmosphere.
[Para 8] As part of an effort to combat smog in the Los Angeles basin, the State of California started requiring emission control systems on all model cars starting in the 1 960s. The United States Federal Government extended these emission control regulations nationwide in 1 968. Congress passed the Clear Air Act in 1 970 and established the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Since then, vehicle manufacturers have had to meet a series of graduated emission control standards for the production and maintenance of vehicles. This involved implementing devices to control engine functions and diagnose engine problems. More specifically, automobile manufacturers started integrating electrically controlled components, such as electric fuel feeds and ignition systems. Sensors were also added to measure engine efficiency, system performance and pollution. These sensors were capable of being accessed for early diagnostic assistance.
[Para 9] On-Board Diagnostics (OBD) refers to early vehicle self-diagnostic systems and reporting capabilities developed and installed in automobiles by manufacturers. OBD systems provide current state information for various vehicle subsystems. The quantity of diagnostic information available via OBD has varied widely since the introduction of on-board computers to automobiles in the early 1 980s. OBD originally illuminated a malfunction indicator light (MIL) for a detected problem, but did not provide information regarding the nature of the problem. Modern OBD implementations use a standardized highspeed digital communications port to provide real-time data in combination with standardized series of diagnostic trouble codes (DTCs) to facilitate rapid identification of malfunctions and the corresponding remedies from within the vehicle.
[Para 1 0] The California Air Resources Board (CARB) developed regulations to enforce the application of the first incarnation of OBD (known now as "OBD-I"). The aim of CARB was to encourage automobile manufacturers to design reliable emission control systems. CARB envisioned lowering vehicle emissions in California by denying registration to vehicles that did not pass the CARB vehicle emission standards. Unfortunately, OBD-I did not succeed at the time because the infrastructure for testing and reporting emissions-specific diagnostic information was not standardized or widely accepted. Technical difficulties in obtaining standardized and reliable emission information from all vehicles resulted in a systemic inability to effectively implement an annual emissions testing program.
[Para 1 1 ] OBD became more sophisticated after the initial implementation of OBD-I. OBD-II was a new standard introduced in the mid- 1 990s that
implemented a new set of standards and practices developed by the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE). These standards were eventually adopted by the EPA and CARB. OBD-II incorporates enhanced features that provide better engine monitoring technologies. OBD-II also monitors chassis parts, body and accessory devices, and includes an automobile diagnostic control network.
OBD-II improved upon OBD-I in both capability and standardization. OBD-II specifies the type of diagnostic connector, pin configuration, electrical signaling protocols, messaging format and provides an extensible list of diagnostic trouble codes (DTCs). OBD-II also monitors a specific list of vehicle parameters and encodes performance data for each of those parameters. Thus, a single device can query the on-board computer(s) in any vehicle. This simplification of reporting diagnostic data led to the feasibility of the comprehensive emissions testing program envisioned by CARB.
[Para 1 2] The use of electrolytically-generated oxy-hydrogen gas has been known to supplement fuel combustion since the mid- 1 8th Century. In 1 766, Sir Henry Cavendish, a British scientist noted for his discovery of oxy-hydrogen or what he called "inflammable air", described the density of inflammable air, which formed water on combustion, in a 1 766 paper entitled "On Factitious Airs". Antoine Lavoisier later reproduced Cavendish's experiment and gave the element its name (oxy-hydrogen). In 1 91 8, Mr. Charles H. Frazer patented the first "Hydrogen Booster" system for internal combustion engines under U.S. Patent. No. 1 ,262,034. In his patent, Frazer stated that his invention (1 ) increases the efficiency of internal combustion engines, (2) completes
combustion of hydrocarbons, (3) helps the engine to stay cleaner, and (4) lowers the grade of fuel that can be used with equal performance. In 1 935 , Henry Garrett patented an electrolytic carburetor that enabled his automobile to run on tap water. Between 1 943-1 945, in response to the shortage of conventional fuel, the British army used oxy-hydrogen gas generators in their tanks, boats and other vehicles to get better mileage and to prevent engine overheating for vehicles used in Africa. In 1 974, Yull Brown (originally a
Bulgarian Student named llya Velbov 1 922- 1 998) from Australia filed a patent on his design of the 'Brown's Gas Electrolyzer'. In 1 977, scientists and engineers at the NASA Lewis Research Center conducted a series of tests using a large block American-made V8 piston engine, fully instrumented and mounted on a dynamometer. Their research was focused on determining the effects exerted by introducing oxy-hydrogen gas to the combustion cycle of a typical internal combustion engine. The results of their studies were published in NASA TN D-8478 C. l , dated May 1 977, in a white paper entitled "EMISSIONS AND TOTAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION OF A MULTICYLINDER PISTON ENGINE RUNNING ON GASOLINE AND A HYDROGEN-GASOLINE MIXTURE". [Para 1 3] In 1 983, Dr. Andrij Puharich obtained U.S. Patent No. 4,394,230 entitled "Method and Apparatus for Splitting Water Molecules". His apparatus was independently tested by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and found to operate at an energy efficiency rate in excess of eighty percent. In 1 990, Juan Carlos Aguero was issued European patent 0 405 91 9 Al for an energy transforming system for internal combustion engines which uses Oxygen-oxy-hydrogen & steam. In 1 990, Stanley A. Meyer was issued
US4,936,961 for a method for the production of a Oxygen-Hydrogen Fuel Gas Using a Dielectric Resonant Circuit. In January 2006, TIAX published a white paper entitled "Application of Hydrogen-Assisted Lean Operation of Natural Gas-Fueled Reciprocating Engines" (HALO), a final scientific & technical report prepared under contract DE-FC26-04NT42235 with the US Department of Energy. The Abstract cites the following results - "Two key challenges facing Natural Gas Engines used for cogeneration purposes are spark plug life and high NOx emissions. Using Hydrogen Assisted Lean Operation (HALO), these two keys issues are simultaneously addressed. HALO operation, as
demonstrated in this project, allows stable engine operation to be achieved at ultra-lean (relative air/fuel ratios of 2) conditions, which virtually eliminates NOx production. NOx values of 1 0 ppm (0.07 g/bhp-hr NO) for 8% (LHV H2/LHV CH4) supplementation at an exhaust O2 level of 1 0% were
demonstrated, which is a 98% NOx emissions reduction compared to the leanest unsupplemented operating condition. Spark ignition energy reduction (which will increase ignition system life) was carried out at an oxygen level of 9 %, leading to a NOx emission level of 28 ppm (0.1 3 g/bhp-hr NO). The spark ignition energy reduction testing found that spark energy could be reduced 22% (from 1 51 mj supplied to the coil) with 1 3% (LHV H2/LHV CH4) oxy-hydrogen supplementation, and even further reduced 27% with 1 7% oxy-hydrogen supplementation, with no reportable effect on NOx emissions for these conditions and with stable engine torque output. Another important result is that the combustion duration was shown to be only a function of oxy-hydrogen supplementation, not a function of ignition energy (until the ignitability limit was reached). The next logical step leading from these promising results is to see how much the spark energy reduction translates into increase in spark plug life, which may be accomplished by durability testing." In 2006, 2006/0075683 Al was published for "Apparatus and method for the conversion of water into a new gaseous and combustible form and the combustible gas formed thereby." In 2007, under contract number NAS7-1 00, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Pasadena, California, issued a white paper entitled "Feasibility Demonstration of a Road Vehicle Fueled with Hydrogen-enriched Gasoline". Their research demonstrated that the addition of stoichiometric mixtures of oxy-hydrogen gas to gasoline combusted in a conventional internal combustion engine"...reduced NOx emissions and improved thermal efficiency."
[Para 1 4] However, these systems have several existing problems. One of the approaches involves generating oxy-hydrogen on a continual basis and storing the oxy-hydrogen for extraction when needed. However, electrically charging the generator plates requires too much of a standard alternator, thus a higher performance alternator is required. Also, consumers have been afraid of existing oxy-hydrogen systems due to the fact these systems constantly produce oxy-hydrogen and store it. This potentially could create explosion concerns due to the stored oxy-hydrogen sitting in the automobile
[Para 1 5] Several problems inhibit the effectiveness of adding oxy-hydrogen gas to supplement fuel combustion in conventional ICE's. None of the patented or commercially available oxy-hydrogen generators are computer controlled in a way that is compatible with OBD-II and OBD-III ECM systems. Further, existing oxy-hydrogen generators designed for use in automobiles generate substantial quantities of water vapor, which is intrinsically inimical to the ferrous components which comprise modern engines.
[Para 1 6] These problems are addressed in US9,051 ,872 which issued June 9, 201 5 to the present applicant. That patent discloses an oxy-hydrogen
generator which is incorporated into a standard internal combustion engine. A microcontroller activates the oxy-hydrogen generator when oxy-hydrogen is needed. The oxy-hydrogen is then mixed with blow-by gases from a PCV valve, which are recycled through the intake manifold. In this patent the on- demand oxy-hydrogen generator comprised a fluid reservoir containing an electrolyte solution.
[Para 1 7] There remains, however, the need for improved oxy-hydrogen gas generator systems which supply computer-controlled stoichiometric volumes of gas on-demand, do not require generation and storage of oxy-hydrogen gas for later use, are compatible with the operating parameters intrinsic to electronically controlled engine management modules, and do not generate a significant quantity of water vapor. The present invention fulfills these needs, and provides other related advantages.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[Para 1 8] The present invention is directed to an on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator for use in internal combustion engines. The on-demand oxy- hydrogen generator comprises, generally, (a) a fluid reservoir containing electrically conductive de-gassed water; (b) a cap for sealing an opening on the fluid reservoir, wherein the cap has a positive terminal, a negative terminal and a gas outlet in communication with an interior of the fluid reservoir; and (c) a pair of the electrode plates attached to the cap and extending into the interior of the fluid reservoir so as to be at least partially submerged in the de-gassed water, one of the pair of electrode plates electrically coupled to the positive terminal and another of the pair of electrode plates electrically coupled to the negative terminal.
[Para 1 9] Positively charged nano-particles of silver and/or platinum may be suspended within the de-gassed water. The positively charged nano-particles comprise a catalyst in an electrolysis reaction of the de-gassed water.
[Para 20] A sensor is provided for detecting quantitative suspension parameters of the positively charged nano-particles within the de-gassed water. [Para 21 ] The electrode plates may comprise non-metallic conductive coatings such as a field of carbon nano-tubes. Alternatively, the electrode plates may comprise a series of metal plates made from a metal selected from the group consisting of zinc, cadmium, gold, platinum and palladium, or from beryllium-copper, beryllium-titanium, and sodium-tungsten alloys. The metal plates also comprise a catalyst in an electrolysis reaction of water.
[Para 22] A secondary reservoir is provided which contains additional degassed water. The secondary reservoir is fluidly connected to the fluid reservoir. A sensor is also provided which for detecting the level of the degassed water in the fluid reservoir.
[Para 23] A gas outlet on the oxy-hydrogen generator releases oxy- hydrogen produced by electrolysis of the de-gassed water. The gas outlet is fluidly coupled to an intake manifold on the engine. Further, a microcontroller is operably connected to the oxy-hydrogen generator for selectively activating the oxy-hydrogen generator in response to a demand for oxy-hydrogen (HOH). The gas outlet is fluidly coupled to a pollution control system for recycling blow-by gases from a crankcase on the internal combustion engine to the intake manifold.
[Para 24] The pollution control system comprises a PCV (Positive Crankcase Ventilation) valve in-line with a vent line from the crankcase and a blow-by return line to the intake manifold. The gas outlet is coupled to the vent line from the crankcase, the blow-by return line to the intake manifold, or the PCV valve. [Para 25] The microcontroller is operably connected to the PCV valve for regulating a flow rate of blow-by gases through the PCV valve.
[Para 26] Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following more detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, which illustrate, by way of example, the principles of the invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[Para 27] The accompanying drawings illustrate the invention. In such drawings:
[Para 28] FIGURE 1 is a schematic diagram of an automobile, illustrating various sensors as well as a microcontroller and a PCV valve and an on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator operably coupled to the PCV valve and microcontroller, in accordance with the present invention;
[Para 29] FIGURE 2 is a diagrammatic cross-sectional view of an internal combustion engine illustrating the incorporation of the oxy-hydrogen
generator of the present invention;
[Para 30] FIGURE 3 is a perspective view of a cap and electrode plates of the oxy-hydrogen generator of the present invention; and
[Para 31 ] FIGURE 4 is a perspective view of an oxy-hydrogen generator embodying the present invention generating oxy-hydrogen, and coupled to an optional bubbler reservoir. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[Para 32] As shown in the drawings, for purposes of illustration, the present invention is directed to an on-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system which is incorporated into a standard internal combustion engine. The oxy-hydrogen generator embodying the present invention is referred to generally by the reference number 1 00. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the oxy- hydrogen generator 1 00 of the present invention is incorporated into a pollution control system, such as that illustrated and described in US8, 360,038 and US201 4/0207360 Al , the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. As such, the oxy-hydrogen generated by the system of the present invention is added to blow-by gases regulated by a microcontroller 1 0 and a PCV valve 1 2.
[Para 33] In FIGURE 1 , the microcontroller 1 0 is preferably mounted under a hood 1 4 of an automobile 1 6. The microcontroller 1 0 is electrically coupled to one or more of a plurality of sensors that monitor and measure real-time operating conditions and performance of the automobile 1 6. The
microcontroller 1 0 regulates the flow rate of blow-by gases by regulating the engine vacuum in a combustion engine through digital control of a PCV valve 1 2. The microcontroller 1 0 receives real-time input from sensors that might include an engine temperature sensor 1 8, a spark plug sensor 20, a battery sensor 22, a PCV valve sensor 24, and engine RPM sensor 26, an accelerometer sensor 28, and an exhaust sensor 30. Data obtained from the sensors 1 8, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, and 30 by the microcontroller 1 0 is used to regulate the PCV valve 1 2 , as described in more detail below. The microcontroller 1 0 preferably comprises a digitally controlled back-flash diode and a digitally controlled pressure regulator valve rather than just an on-off regulator designed to meet HOH demand.
[Para 34] FIGURE 2 is a schematic illustrating operation of the microcontroller 1 0 in conjunction with the PCV valve 1 2 in a car engine 1 5. As shown in FIG. 2 , the PCV valve 1 2 is disposed between a crankcase 49, of an engine 1 5, and an intake manifold 51 . In operation, the intake manifold 51 receives a mixture of fuel and air via a fuel line 41 and an air line 42 , respectively. An air filter 44 may be disposed between the air line 42 and an air intake line 46 to filter fresh air before mixing with fuel in the intake manifold 51 . The air/fuel mixture in the intake manifold 51 is delivered to a piston cylinder 48 as a piston 50 descends downward within the cylinder 48 from the top dead center. This creates a vacuum within a combustion chamber 52. Accordingly, an input camshaft 54 rotating at half the speed of the crankshaft 49 is designed to open an input valve 56 thereby subjecting the intake manifold 51 to the engine vacuum. Thus, fuel/air is drawn into the combustion chamber 52 from the intake manifold 51 .
[Para 35] The fuel/air in the combustion chamber 52 is ignited by a spark plug 58 (in a gasoline engine). The rapid expansion of the ignited fuel/air in the combustion chamber 52 causes depression of the piston 50 within the cylinder 48. After combustion, an exhaust camshaft 60 opens an exhaust valve 62 to allow escape of the combustion gases from the combustion chamber 52 out an exhaust line 64. Typically, during the combustion cycle, excess exhaust gases slip by a pair of piston rings 66 mounted in the head 68 of the piston 50. These "blow-by gases" enter the crankcase 49 as high pressure and
temperature gases. Over time, harmful exhaust gases such as hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide can condense out from a gaseous state and coat the interior of the crankcase 49 and mix with the oil 70 that lubricates the mechanics within the crankcase 49.
[Para 36] But, the PCV valve 1 2 is designed to vent these blow-by gases from the crankcase 49 to the intake manifold 51 to be recycled as fuel for the engine 1 5. This is accomplished by using the pressure differential between the crankcase 49 and the intake manifold 51 . In operation, the blow-by gases exit the relatively higher pressure crankcase 49 through a vent 72 and travel through a vent line 74, the PCV valve 1 2, a blow-by return line 76 and into a relatively lower pressure intake manifold 51 coupled thereto. Accordingly, the quantity of blow-by gases vented from the crankcase 49 to the intake manifold 51 via the PCV valve 1 2 is digitally regulated by the microcontroller 1 0, which is connected to the PCV valve via connection wires 32. The microcontroller 1 0 is powered by a battery 1 1 and grounded at the ground connection 1 3.
[Para 37] In particular, venting blow-by gases based on engine speed and other operating characteristics of an automobile decreases the quantity of hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide and carbon dioxide emissions. The PCV valve 1 2 and microcontroller 1 0 recycle gases by burning them in the combustion cycle. No longer are large quantities of the contaminants expelled from the vehicle via the exhaust. Hence, when installed in an automobile engine, the PCV valve 1 2 and microcontroller 1 0 are capable of reducing air pollution emissions for each automobile, increasing gas mileage per gallon, increasing horsepower performance, reducing engine wear (due to low carbon retention) and dramatically reducing the number of oil changes required.
[Para 38] In operation, the microcontroller 1 0 functions in three states. First, upon ignition of the vehicle, the microcontroller 1 0 causes the solenoid 80 in the PCV valve 1 2 to stay closed, as described above. This is because the engine 1 5 of the vehicle produces large quantities of pollution while still heating up. Once the engine 1 5 is properly heated, it functions more efficiently and produces less pollution. At that point, the microcontroller 1 0 enters the next state and functions as a window switch based on the engine RPM. While the engine is operating with a certain RPM range, the microcontroller 1 0 causes the solenoid 80 in the PCV valve 1 2 to open. Once the engine falls out of that RPM range, the solenoid 80 in the PCV valve 1 2 closes again. If the vehicle is being driven in conditions where the RPM stays in the given range for long periods of time (i.e. highway driving), then the microcontroller 1 0 activates a timing sequence so the vehicle's on-board diagnostics is prevented from introducing too much fuel into the engine. This timing sequence can be programmed to any interval, but in the preferred embodiment the sequence causes the solenoid 80 in the PCV valve 1 2 to be open for two minutes, then closed for 1 0 minutes. This sequence is repeated indefinitely until the engine RPM falls out of the given range. [Para 39] While the logic of the microcontroller 1 0 is based primarily on engine RPM, the microcontroller 1 0 may have logic based on other criteria. Such criteria may be engine temperature and engine torque, as well as crankcase pressure. Basing the microcontroller logic on these additional criteria makes for a control system that is more adjustable and programmable.
[Para 40] With reference to FIGS. 1 and 2, the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 of the present invention is operably coupled to the microcontroller 1 0 and the PCV valve 1 2. The microcontroller 1 0 is used to selectively power the oxy- hydrogen generator 1 00, causing the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 to generate oxy-hydrogen and create a flow of oxy-hydrogen into the PCV valve and/or the intake manifold 51 with the blow-by gases from the crankcase. The produced oxy-hydrogen is approximately 1 80 octane, and thus provides a very efficient fuel source that can dramatically increase fuel efficiency and reduce emissions.
[Para 41 ] With reference now to FIG. 3, the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 comprises a series of electrode plates 1 04 and 1 06, comprising anode and cathode electrodes. The plates 1 04 and 1 06 can comprise any known conductors which can be used for electrolysis of a water solution into oxy- hydrogen gas. The plates 1 04 and 1 06 may serve as a catalyst or promoter to facilitate the rate of the chemical reaction of the water being turned into oxy- hydrogen gas and oxygen. Alternatively, the plates merely serve to conduct electricity through the water solution to perform the electrolysis and electrically convert the water molecules to oxy-hydrogen and oxygen gas. [Para 42] The plates 1 04 and 1 06 may be metallic plates comprising zinc, gold, platinum, cadmium, palladium and the like. Such plates, however, typically cannot be used long term without substantial degradation, especially in anode applications. Alternative alloyed elements such as beryllium-copper, beryllium-titanium, and/or sodium-tungsten are significantly superior in terms of (a) conductivity, (b) surface degradation, (c) residual persistence, and (d) longevity. Further, when the anode/cathode metals are carefully matched to optimize electron exchange (e.g., sodium-tungsten anodes with beryllium- copper cathodes), the dissociation efficiency of an electrolytic cell can be substantially increased.
[Para 43] The principle challenges associated with the water electrolysis process are related to the form, structure and allowable effective surface area provided by anode and cathode elements. In conventional HHO generators, 31 6 stainless steel plates are placed in close proximity to each other with gaps between them designed to allow electrolytic solutions to flow freely. The surface of the plates is 'scruffed' using a rough grinding disk to increase the effective surface area exposed to the electrical interactions that occur between the ionic salts held in solution and the ragged 'points' characterized by roughening the surface of the plates. The reaction between the solution and the electrical discharge occurring at the surface of the plates is optimized at the microscopic tips or points created by scruffing the plate surfaces. SEM
microscopy illustrates the liberation of H+ and OH- ions occurring at those points. • The fundamental limitation of this approach is that no amount of surface treatment can be expected to significantly increase the effective surface area exhibited by a flat plate. However, two approaches have been demonstrated that mitigate this limitation:
• Metallic Foam - the use of finely divided open-cell metallic foam panels exponentially increases the amount of HOH gas that can be generated as compared with flat panels of conductive metals (e.g., 31 6 Stainless Steel, Copper, etc.); and
• Carbon nano-tubes - Carbon nano-tube structures can be grown in situ on the surface of electrically conductive substrates with extraordinary precision and at rapidly declining costs. Carbon nano-tube technologies serve to (a) exponentially increase surface area, and (b) exponentially increase ionization/ dissociation efficiencies in electrolytical processes.
[Para 44] Accordingly, optimal effectiveness and energy efficiency in an electrolytic apparatus can best be achieved when the combination of anode- cathode materials, solution conductivity, exposed surface area and optimal geometry can be integrated in an array that effectively liberates transitional hydrogen (protium) and hydroxyl ions from aqueous suspensions rather than attempting to break the H-OH bonds as described in conventional literature.
[Para 45] Accordingly, the present invention contemplates the use of the electrically-conductive materials for anode and/or cathode conductors that are not metallic. For example, conductive substrates coated with a field of carbon nano-tubes grown in place with a specified number of "turns" or "twists" will provide much higher conductivity and exponentially-increased surface area when compared with flat metallic plates.
[Para 46] With reference to FIGS. 3 and 4, the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 includes a cap 1 08 which seals the top of a container 1 1 0. Electrodes or terminals 1 1 2 and 1 1 4, representing the cathode and anode, extend from electrical coupling to the plates 1 04 and 1 06 to the exterior of the cap 1 08 so as to be coupled to electrical wires from the electrical source of the internal combustion engine, such as the battery, alternator or the like.
[Para 47] Pure water is not a very effective conductor, and it would require that a large amount of electricity to be applied to the electrodes 1 1 2 and 1 1 4 in order to electrolyze the water into oxy-hydrogen. Thus, in one preferred form of the invention, an electrolyte water solution is created, such as by adding an electrolytic salt - potassium nitrate, sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) or the like - to the water. This creates an effective electrolyte solution which requires much less electricity to cause the electrolysis of the water. As the plates 1 04 and 1 06 become electrically charged, they cause the electrolyte solution 1 1 6 to boil, creating oxy-hydrogen gas 1 1 8 in an upper portion of the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00. This oxy-hydrogen gas 1 1 8 is channeled via outlet 1 20 to the intake manifold 51 , either by means of the PCV valve 1 2 and/or introducing the oxy-hydrogen gas directly into the intake manifold 51 or plumbing the system such that it is combined with the blow-by gases from the crankcase before they enter the intake manifold 51 . As mentioned above, the produced oxy- hydrogen is approximately 1 80 octane, and thus provides a very efficient fuel source for re-burning the blow-by gases so as to dramatically increase fuel efficiency and reduce emissions.
[Para 48] An alternative to using an electrolytic salt in solution in water as a way of increasing the electrical conductivity of water is through the use of ultra-pure de-gassed water as disclosed in US2005/0096398, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. This process for the production of emulsions and dispersions provides a means for radically altering the electrical structure of water that does not require the addition of an electrolytic salt.
[Para 49] Another alternative to using an electrolytic salt in solution in water as a way of increasing the electrical conductivity of water is through the use of laser-generated spherical, positively charged nano-particles of silver and/or platinum held in suspension as a way of reducing the dissociation voltage of water into H+ and OH- radicals from 1 .43 VDC to 0.89 VDC without the need to add electrolytic salts. See, for example, US201 3 /0001 833, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
[Para 50] By way of background information and explanation, the
current/standard model approaches the issue of dissociation in terms of the ideal gas model. In this model, the water molecule is viewed in terms of individual molecules operating as mutually exclusive constituents rather than in terms of the dynamical relationships which actually occur at sub-molecular scales.
[Para 51 ] The ideal gas formula dictates that 1 mole of H2O (1 8 grams) can be expected to generate 22.1 liters of HOH gas at 70° F at sea level using a dissociation voltage of 1 .23 VDC at varying levels of amperage. The experimental data collected over the past 1 50 years demonstrates that the formula is in error by as much as 1 6.2% in actual practice. Science has struggled unsuccessfully to explain the discrepancy between the theoretical versus actual results obtained when water is dissociated using a wide variety of techniques under carefully controlled conditions. The actual dissociation voltage threshold that has been repeatedly demonstrated is 1 .43 - 1 .48 VDC. The energy density predicted by the ideal gas formula equates for HOH gas relative to gasoline (for example) is 22.4 liters of HOH = 1 ml 87 octane gasoline (no ethanol).
[Para 52] Laboratory tests have repeatedly demonstrated significant
variances between actual practice and the results predicted by the ideal gas law. For example, when 1 8 meg-ohm water is thoroughly degassed (using
conventional, off-the-shelf apparatus currently in general use in most hospitals in the USA), HOH can be produced at the rate of 22.4 liters per mole at an effective voltage of 0.1 22 VDC - fully 1 0 times more efficiently than the predicted rate. Further, the energy density of HOH gas (depending on
meteorological variables such humidity, temperature, dew point, etc.) is 1 .8 - 2.4 liters HOH = 1 ml 87 octane gasoline, which is also fully 1 0 times greater than the predicted value generated with the ideal gas formula.
[Para 53] When 0.69 nano-meter spherical, positively charged particles of silver (generated by the Attostat method) are suspended in 1 0 meg-ohm water, the threshold for dissociation drops from 1 .43 VDC to 0.89 VDC, all other variables being equal. When the same particles are introduced to degassed 1 8 meg-ohm water, the dissociation voltage drops to 0.1 22 VDC.
[Para 54] These results are explained by the description of molecular interactions occurring in water introduced by the Y-Bias and Angularity model of fine scale physical interactions. In summary, the Y-Bias model shows that:
• Water molecules exchange H+ ions with neighboring water molecules at the rate of 1 01 7 per molecule per second. The net effect of this insight is that at any given moment in time, at least 50% of the H+ ions which comprise water are unbounded and in transition;
• The Infinite Rydberg Limit (energy density) of bounded hydrogen atoms in water molecules is calculated in terms of temperature and others meteorological factors. It is taken as defacto that the values determined by this method are directly calculable as sub-sets of the ideal gas law formulations. But there is a fundamental problem with this approach - when at least 50% of the H+ ions are in transition (and unbounded), there is no mathematical expression extant that describes the Rydberg Limits of transitional Hydrogen ions that do not carry an electron with them. The net differential between the theoretical input energy required to
dissociate HOH into H+ and OH- is therefore a function of an underlying dynamic that is ignored by the conventional model; and
• Water cannot exist in liquid form without the introduction of extrinsic foreign 'contaminants' in the form of colloids, molecules, particles, or gases of other materials. The demonstration of how powerfully this effects the behavioral dynamics of water is described in US
2005/0096398 Al . When water is purified - that is, when the foreign particulates are removed - and degassed, it becomes exceptionally conductive and unstable. In this state, degassed water can be sprayed on the sides of petroleum storage tanks (for example) to immediately remove caked deposits by taking them fully into solution. In this circumstance, oil and water become fully miscible. This is demonstrates why degassed water can be dissociated at very low voltage and current.
[Para 55] A careful review of US201 3/0001 833 yields some important insights into the role of catalytic processes that operate at the sub-molecular level in water. Ordinarily, silver held in suspension in water as a colloidal dispersion will precipitate voluntarily over time. This is a function of (a) variation in size, (b) variations in geometry, and (c) ambient negative charge held by the particles as a product of the generation process. The process of US201 3/0001 833 is much different in both form and function. It produces nano-particles that are (a) absolutely uniform, (b) absolutely spherical, and (c) positively and uniformly charged before being introduced as a suspension product. Silver particles manufactured by this process do not precipitate out of suspension voluntarily. Suspensions have been held in storage for more than 5 years without demonstrating any significant degree of precipitation. The fact that the silver nano-particles held in suspension are positively charged enables them to act as electrical charge-discharge step-stones between water molecules without dissociating the water molecules in the same manner as ionic salts.
[Para 56] Several salutary benefits are produced by the use of this material in an electrolysis process: (a) a single charge of silver or platinum nano-spheres introduced as a suspension to distilled water does not need to be replaced once the suspension has been created (as long as the reservoir is not allowed to be completely depleted); (b) the use of such particles does not introduce a contaminating stream of pollutants to the environment as a waste product; and (c) the use of such particles increases the net efficiency of the electrolysis process by one order of magnitude.
[Para 57] As illustrated in FIG. 4, the system of the present invention may incorporate a reservoir bubbler 1 22 having additional electrolyte solution 1 1 6 therein so as to refill and recharge the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 as the electrolyte solution levels decrease over time as gases are produced. However, the reservoir bubbler 1 22 does take up valuable space within the engine compartment. Thus, it is contemplated that the present invention includes a sensor 1 24 in the oxy-hydrogen generator 1 00 which will alert the user when the water electrolyte solution level gets low. It is anticipated with normal use, the electrolyte water solution will only need to be filled every few months.
[Para 58] It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the present invention overcomes many of the concerns and disadvantages of existing and proposed automobile oxy-hydrogen systems. The system is "on-demand", and thus only generates oxy-hydrogen when it is needed. This is digitally controlled via the microcontroller 1 0, and thus there is no excess oxy-hydrogen that needs to be stored, which can create fire and explosion concerns or require safety precautions for safely storing the extra oxy-hydrogen, as with existing oxy-hydrogen generation systems.
[Para 59] The system of the present invention avoids issues relating to the automobile's fuel sensor. Fuel sensors are not calibrated to account for such a rich fuel source. However, bringing the oxy-hydrogen generated by the system of the present invention through a "back door" by mixing it with the blow-by effectively circumvents the automobile's fuel sensor.
[Para 60] Whereas existing oxy-hydrogen generator systems for automobiles are problematic as the oxy-hydrogen is generated with a large amount of water vapor, which gets into the engine and eventually causes rust, the present invention eliminates this concern as the PCV valve continually vents vapor out of the crankcase. Thus, the water vapor generated with the oxy-hydrogen is not in the crankcase or engine long enough to cause any serious rust concerns. [Para 61 ] Although several embodiments have been described in detail for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not to be limited, except as by the appended claims.

Claims

What i s cl ai m ed i s :
[C l ai m 1 ] An on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator for an internal combustion engine, comprising:
a fluid reservoir containing electrically conductive de-gassed water;
a cap for sealing an opening on the fluid reservoir, wherein the cap has a positive terminal, a negative terminal and a gas outlet in fluid communication with an interior of the fluid reservoir; and
a pair of electrode plates attached to the cap and extending into the interior of the fluid reservoir so as to be at least partially submerged in the degassed water, one of the pair of electrode plates electrically coupled to the positive terminal and another of the pair of electrode plates electrically coupled to the negative terminal.
[C l ai m 2] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 wherein the electrode plates comprise non-metallic conductive coatings.
[C l ai m 3] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 2 , wherein the nonmetallic conductive coating comprises carbon nano-tubes.
[C l ai m 4] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 , wherein the electrode plates comprises a series of metal plates made from a metal selected from the group consisting of zinc, cadmium, gold, platinum, and palladium, or from beryllium-copper, beryllium-titanium and/or sodium-tungsten alloys.
[C l ai m 5] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 4, wherein the series of metal plates comprise a catalyst in an electrolysis reaction of water.
[C l ai m 6] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 , further comprising a secondary reservoir containing additional de-gassed water, the secondary reservoir fluidly connected to the fluid reservoir.
[C l ai m 7] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 , further comprising a sensor configured to detect a level of the de-gassed water in the fluid reservoir.
[C l ai m 8] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 ,
wherein a gas outlet on the oxy-hydrogen generator releases oxy- hydrogen produced by electrolysis of the de-gassed water, the gas outlet fluidly coupled to an intake manifold on the engine, and further comprising:
a microcontroller operably connected to the oxy-hydrogen generator for selectively activating the oxy-hydrogen generator in response to a demand for oxy-hydrogen.
[C l ai m 9] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 8, wherein the gas outlet is fluidly coupled to a pollution control system for recycling blow-by gases from a crankcase on the internal combustion engine to the intake manifold.
[C l ai m 1 0] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 9, wherein the pollution control system comprises a PCV valve in-line with a vent line from the crankcase and a blow-by return line to the intake manifold.
[C l ai m 1 1 ] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 0, wherein the gas outlet is coupled to the vent line from the crankcase, the blow-by return line to the intake manifold, or the PCV valve.
[C l ai m 1 2] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 0, wherein the microcontroller is operably connected to the PCV valve.
[C l ai m 1 3] An on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator for an internal combustion engine, comprising:
a fluid reservoir containing electrically conductive de-gassed water; a cap for sealing an opening on the fluid reservoir, wherein the cap has a positive terminal, a negative terminal and a gas outlet in fluid communication with an interior of the fluid reservoir;
a pair of electrode plates attached to the cap and extending into the interior of the fluid reservoir so as to be at least partially submerged in the degassed water, one of the pair of electrode plates electrically coupled to the positive terminal and another of the pair of electrode plates electrically coupled to the negative terminal ; and positively charged nano-particles of silver and/or platinum suspended within the de-gassed water.
[Clai m 1 4] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 3, wherein the positively charged nano-particles comprise a catalyst in an electrolysis reaction of the de-gassed water.
[Clai m 1 5] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 3, further comprising a sensor for detecting quantitative suspension parameters of the positively charged nano-particles within the de-gassed water.
[Clai m 1 6] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 3 wherein the electrode plates comprise non-metallic conductive coatings.
[Clai m 1 7] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 6, wherein the nonmetallic conductive coating comprises a carbon nano-tube field.
[Clai m 1 8] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 3, further comprising a secondary reservoir containing additional de-gassed water, the secondary reservoir fluidly connected to the fluid reservoir.
[C l ai m 1 9] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 3, further comprising a sensor configured to detect a level of the de-gassed water in the fluid reservoir.
[C l ai m 20] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 3
wherein a gas outlet on the oxy-hydrogen generator releases oxy- hydrogen produced by electrolysis of the de-gassed water, the gas outlet fluidly coupled to an intake manifold on the engine; and further comprising:
a microcontroller operably connected to the oxy-hydrogen generator for selectively activating the oxy-hydrogen generator in response to a demand for oxy-hydrogen.
[C l ai m 2 1 ] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 1 4, wherein the gas outlet is fluidly coupled to a pollution control system for recycling blow-by gases from a crankcase on the internal combustion engine to the intake manifold.
[C l ai m 22] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 20, wherein the pollution control system comprises a PCV valve in-line with a vent line from the crankcase and a blow-by return line to the intake manifold.
[C l ai m 2 3] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 22, wherein the gas outlet is coupled to the vent line from the crankcase, the blow-by return line to the intake manifold, or the PCV valve.
[C l ai m 24] The on-demand oxy-hydrogen generator of claim 22, wherein the microcontroller is operably connected to the PCV valve for regulating a flow rate of blow-by gases through the PCV valve.
PCT/US2016/040291 2016-01-27 2016-06-30 On-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system WO2017131812A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US15/007,493 2016-01-27
US15/007,493 US20170211516A1 (en) 2016-01-27 2016-01-27 On-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2017131812A1 true WO2017131812A1 (en) 2017-08-03

Family

ID=59359608

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2016/040291 WO2017131812A1 (en) 2016-01-27 2016-06-30 On-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US20170211516A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2017131812A1 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
TWI698577B (en) * 2019-01-17 2020-07-11 林世寶 Energy-saving device of internal combustion engine

Families Citing this family (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CA2865426C (en) 2012-02-27 2020-07-28 Deec, Inc. Oxygen-rich plasma generators for boosting internal combustion engines
BR112018068006A2 (en) 2016-03-07 2019-01-15 Hytech Power Inc method for generating and distributing a second fuel to an internal combustion engine
US20190234348A1 (en) 2018-01-29 2019-08-01 Hytech Power, Llc Ultra Low HHO Injection
CN110332061A (en) * 2019-07-12 2019-10-15 爱回家(广东)科技有限公司 A kind of oil-saving discharging-reducing system
CN111794880B (en) * 2020-07-18 2021-08-17 河北柒壹壹玖工业自动化技术有限公司 Hydrogen storage tank constant temperature equipment based on hydrogen kinetic energy engine
JP2023142840A (en) * 2022-03-25 2023-10-05 日野自動車株式会社 Treatment device

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3980053A (en) * 1974-07-03 1976-09-14 Beeston Company Limited Fuel supply apparatus for internal combustion engines
US5484512A (en) * 1992-01-08 1996-01-16 Shinko Pantec Co., Ltd. Methods and apparatuses for producing high purity oxygen and hydrogen
US20100012503A1 (en) * 2008-07-15 2010-01-21 Next Hydrogen Corporation Electrolyser module
WO2014033204A1 (en) * 2012-08-29 2014-03-06 Solvicore Gmbh & Co. Kg Colloidal dispersions comprising precious metal particles and acidic ionomer components and methods of their manufacture and use
US20140113127A1 (en) * 2011-05-13 2014-04-24 Masato Tominaga Carbon nanotube composite electrode and method for manufacturing the same
US20140216366A1 (en) * 2013-02-01 2014-08-07 Serge V. Monros Hydrogen on-demand fuel system for internal combustion engines

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3980053A (en) * 1974-07-03 1976-09-14 Beeston Company Limited Fuel supply apparatus for internal combustion engines
US5484512A (en) * 1992-01-08 1996-01-16 Shinko Pantec Co., Ltd. Methods and apparatuses for producing high purity oxygen and hydrogen
US20100012503A1 (en) * 2008-07-15 2010-01-21 Next Hydrogen Corporation Electrolyser module
US20140113127A1 (en) * 2011-05-13 2014-04-24 Masato Tominaga Carbon nanotube composite electrode and method for manufacturing the same
WO2014033204A1 (en) * 2012-08-29 2014-03-06 Solvicore Gmbh & Co. Kg Colloidal dispersions comprising precious metal particles and acidic ionomer components and methods of their manufacture and use
US20140216366A1 (en) * 2013-02-01 2014-08-07 Serge V. Monros Hydrogen on-demand fuel system for internal combustion engines

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
TWI698577B (en) * 2019-01-17 2020-07-11 林世寶 Energy-saving device of internal combustion engine

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20170211516A1 (en) 2017-07-27

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20170211516A1 (en) On-demand oxy-hydrogen fuel system
US9051872B2 (en) Hydrogen on-demand fuel system for internal combustion engines
CA2888649C (en) Hydrogen on-demand fuel system for internal combustion engines
US7191737B2 (en) Hydrogen generator for uses in a vehicle fuel system
US10830162B2 (en) System and process for improving emission performance in engines
De Silva et al. HHO generator–an approach to increase fuel efficiency in spark ignition engines
Al-Rousan et al. Green transportation: increasing fuel consumption efficiency through HHO gas injection in diesel vehicles
GB2479404A (en) Electrolytic process and device for enriching hydrocarbon fuel with hydrogen
Mahendran et al. Review of performance and emission characteristics of HHO Gas as a fuel
Karthik Better performance of vehicles using hho gas
CN105089869A (en) Double-sleeve type electrode internal combustion engine device with water serving as fuel
Nag et al. Oxy-hydrogen fuel as supplement for gasoline vihicles using dry cell generator
US11781474B2 (en) Gaseous fuel generator equipment hydrogen-oxygen applied to internal combustion engines
Konoplev et al. Analysis of using hydrogen in the internal combustion engines of motor vehicles to increase operational efficiency
Samath et al. Analysis of hydrogen fuelled two stroke petrol engine
Chothani et al. Government Engineering College, Rajkot
RU161161U1 (en) DIESEL INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE
Ingle Oxy Hydrogen Gas Generator Design and Development for SI Engine
WO2019234757A1 (en) Fuel saving device and method of reduction of fuel
Lodhi A Study of Vehicular Propulsion Systems
Asad et al. Hydrogen as a Fuel Supplement in a CNG Operated Vehicle Using a Simple Onboard Hydrogen Generation System
Pohane et al. HYDROGEN POWERED PETROL VEHICLE (HHO ENGINE)
CN101209670A (en) Car with arc hydrogen carbon composite general fuel supply device
GB2479528A (en) A device for diffusing gas into a liquid

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 16888537

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase

Ref document number: 16888537

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1